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OH MY GOD!

So Ridley scott has been going on and on for the better part of a year that his new film is not an Alien prequel as originally planned, but had evolved into something wholly unique…

He has also said that the “keen fan” will recognize strands of Alien’s DNA in the last act of the film.

I assumed he meant thematic and tonal similarities, although I suspected (as did the rest of the internet) that the “Space Jockeys” would play a role.

Well folks, the trailer came out today and i assure you, its an Alien prequel.  sure we may not see xenomorphs, but come on…”The keen fan” the keen fan will notice the way the title comes up on screen as the same in Aline, but even the causal fan can see the pilot room, the Derelict crashing, the whole feeling and design of it.

this is a quick post, and i’m sure there will be more, but WOW does that movie look cool.

October People

Halloween is coming folks. That age old harvest festival so changed from it’s origins but still fundementaly the time of year when we celebrate the end of the warm months and get ready for winter. There is no better season and the taste of apples and pumpkin is already on my tongue.  Forgive the runons…..

24 days till Halloween, happy Friday everyone

A+++

Last night FX premiered their new show, American Horror Story, and my god what an excessive, insane, over the top, pulse pounding, gruesome, mind bending, erotic, overstuffed, lunatic nightmare it was.

The creator’s of this show clearly know horror fans and what we want to see, and my god they make sure we see everything there could possibly be. To me, the Lynch inspired, Argento style lunacy was so full of nightmare logic and unsettling imagery that I could not wait for it to be over, yet craved the next episode as soon as it was.

After a particularly awesome 1978 opening sequence, we follow a family still reeling from a few tragedies. Connie Britton plays Vivian Harmon, who has recently suffered a miscarriage as well as walking in on her husband Ben (Dylan McDermott) having an affair. To quell their troubled lives, the family pack up and move to the west coast where they buy a creepy house with a tragic past. Standard stuff, but executed with such disregard for restraint that I found the material fresh. In tow with them is their daughter Violet, who with her big hat and gothy expression channels a “Lydia Dietz” era Wynona Rider. To round out the list of insane people are Jessica Lange, basically playing Blanche Dubois meets Gloria Swanson (but, dare I say…crazier), her mentally challenged daughter, a disturbed teenage patient of Ben’s who has eyes for violet, a burn victim who used to live in the house before going all Ronnie Defeo/Jack Torrence on them, creepy ginger twins (in both breathing and non breathing varieties!), a young/old housekeeper, drug using bully girls, a leather gimp suit (‘cause at this point why the hell not), and whatever the baby/old woman clawed strobe light thing lurking in the basement is.

There is not a boring moment in the entire pilot, which moves so fast and is so intense that you barely have time to register the latest bit of madcap insanity the house is dishing out at you. Oh! Did I mention the creepy murals that not even I would allow in my house, yeah, creepy murals…and baby parts in jars….and dead….things…and….

You know what, I’m hooked; I’m along for the ride, wherever this nightmare takes me. It could almost stray into camp if it was not for the intense sense of foreboding that came with every shot. If you have ever enjoyed horror, check this one out, it’s made for us.

Howdy all,
Started a new job so posts have been even more infrequent of late, however i’m planning on changing that. in addition to the usual reviews and articles here, i’ll also be posting a weekly column called “The Meandering Gentleman” which I suppose will be more akin to personal blogs and (gasp!) journal entries than the more journalistic attempts on the site. thanks for reading, updates to come

 

Super 8

Dir. J.J. Abrams

***/****

 

I dig J.J. Abrams, I really do.  I was a latecomer to Lost and did not start watching it until just after the series had ended.  This was a conscious decision my part, having been too big a fan of odd experimental shows that get cancelled before their resolution (good or bad, but this is a topic for another day).  But I like his style, I like his tone, and I like how everything he likes, I like.  I never miss a reference he makes or fail to get the homage he is doing, and that always makes me smile.  Its good to know that there are other people out there with almost identical tastes to me, and that they can be successful.

Super 8 is the first film Abrams has directed from an original concept, and despite what ever the concept seems to be, I would argue that the actual pitch for the film was something a long the lines of this.

ABRAMS: I have an original concept I’d like to pitch.

STUDIO: not a comic book?

ABRAMS: No

STUDIO: Toy line?

ABRAMS: Are you kidding?

STUDIO: Remake?

ABRAMS: No

STUDIO: (hopeful) Reboot?

ABRAMS: Nope

STUDIO: Come on!

ABRAMS: Fine…Spielberg

STUDIO: Post Schindler?

ABRAMS: (Sighing) Pre

STUDO: Done…but we expect aliens.

ABRAMS: Duh.

 

Point being, Abrams set out from the very beginning to do a film that harkens back to the Spielberg glory days of Jaws, E.T, Close Encounters and the like.  And with The Great Berg producing, it was easy to accomplish.

I won’t go into the plot of the film, or its stars or the effects.  Rather I would like to discuss if I may the tone of the work.  If in the coming decades SPIELBERGIAN is it’s own genre, then Super 8 made it possible.  Every moment of the film has that flavor of the old blockbusters The Great Berg used to direct and produce.  It had the sense of wonder, the looming menace, and the distant fathers…oh the distant fathers.  It was not hard to see who would have played each of the adult parts had this movie been made when it takes place (Richard Dreyfus = Cop Dad, easily.)

There are moments in the film where it is hard to believe Abrams directed them at all, that’s how reminiscent they are.  One notable scene is early on in the film where a large family is getting ready for dinner.  The kids are playing and watching TV, the mother is rushing around the kitchen, the father is tired form work and good naturedly tells his kids to be quite, the older daughter fights with her mother and so on.  Similar sequences can be found in Close Encounters, E.T. and Poltergeist (I know Tobe Hooper directed this, but many people have claimed Spielberg had a bigger hand in it than he is credited, and form the look and tone of the film, it’s pretty obvious) Indulge me in another imaginary dialogue, one that I kept running in my head through out several portions of the film.

 

ABRAMS: Steve, how would you direct this scene?

SPIELBERG: Just give me the camera J.J.

 

Abrams relies so much on Spielbergian story telling, that you almost forget that he directed the film until the last act.  The creature is pure Abrams.  (In fact that was my only disappointment, his designers ideas tend to all look annoyingly similar, and the spindly sinewy Cloverfield-esque alien was a bit off from the rest of the film.)

But is this a bad thing? Absolutely not.  It was the point of the film, to recreate the timeless cinema of late mid century America, when the adventure came back full swing and the blockbuster was born.  And in that, it was a success.  I sat in the theater with the feeling of awe and wonder I always have when watching any of the great Spielberg films. (Except E.T.  My friends know how I feel about E.T.  Haven’t watched it since I was 6 and probably never will.  Terrifying) it succeeded in what it was trying to do, and although Abrams could learn to love the lens flare a bit less, it was a more than satisfying summer flick that took me back to Jurassic Park, Close Encounters, and so many more films that I love.

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